Steel and Sorrow: Rise of the Mercenary king - Chapter 233
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- Chapter 233 - Chapter 233 Battle of the bleeding plains(4)
Chapter 233: Battle of the bleeding plains(4) Chapter 233: Battle of the bleeding plains(4) Away from the chaos of the main battlefield, Lord Xanthios and his detachment found themselves locked in a desperate fight for survival.
Hundreds of enemy soldiers had poured out from the garrison of Arduronaven in a swift, brutal sortie, aiming to strike at the camp and overwhelm the defenders stationed there.
The clash of steel and the shouts of fighting men filled the air, echoing off the hastily constructed walls and throwing the entire camp into turmoil.
The enemy attackers, armed with makeshift ladders and ropes, swarmed toward te two-and-a-half-meter walls surrounding the camp, determined to break through and wreak havoc on the defenseless supplies and rear guard.
They raised their ladders against the walls, clambering up as stones rained down from the defenders above.
Xanthios, gripping his sword tightly, stood at the front of the line, roaring orders and striking down attackers as they breached the defenses.
“KEEP FIGHTING!” Xanthios bellowed, cutting down an enemy soldier who had managed to scale the wall, sending him tumbling backward onto his comrades below.
His face was set in a grim mask of determination as he moved around, his armor blood-streaked but his movements precise, undeterred by the sheer number of attackers.
His desire to hold the line was driven not only by his duty but also by Alpheo’s promise-the promise that, if they succeeded, Xanthios would finally get his revenge.
The attackers were twice the defenders’ number, a surge of bodies and blades pressed against the camp’s defenses in a brutal, ceaseless tide.
They had no choice but to assault the camp if they wished to move onto the battlefield; they couldn’t leave an enemy stronghold standing behind them.
The sight was a chaotic maelstrom, with desperate soldiers scrambling up ladders while those above cut them down in close combat, steel clashing on steel and echoing across the field.
The defenders, made up of the infantry Alpheo had sponsored, who had trained through the winter under the watchful eyes of Jarza, rallied by the unyielding example of Lord Xanthios, who fought alongside them on the walls with tireless vigor, they held fast, resisting each fresh wave of attackers, with a vigour that they never believed they could have.
Lord Xanthios, meanwhile kept getting in the middle of the fighting striking down assailants as they climbed, all while shouting encouragement to his men, his voice ringing clear and fierce over the noise of the battle.
“Hold the line!
The prince depends on us!
We will not fall today!” he roared, his defiant cry invigorating his soldiers as they pushed back the advancing enemy.
 Alpheo’s decision not to fill the moat now made perfect sense to him -it was a measure to trap any cavalry within the city walls.
If the enemy’s horsemen attempted to join their comrades on the battlefield, the moat would hold them back.
Without it, they would have ridden free, easily outpacing Xanthios’s forces and joining the battlefield .
What a clever bastard, Xanthios thought , a glint of admiration flickering in his eyes before he turned back to the fray.
—————————— As the battle continued eagerly on all sides a rider came galloping toward Lord Tavel, dust clouding the air as he pulled up short before the lord and shouted, “My lord!
Sir Harwin is dead-the flank is collapsing, and the men are being forced back!” Tavel’s face darkened, Damn that fool of a knight! You’d think he could do one job.
He turned to one of his own men, and pointed sharply.
“Take command of the archers.
Support our flank immediately and keep them from breaking entirely.” As the men was ready to take off however another rider approached, face strained and voice urgent.
“My lord, scouts have sighted enemy forces moving toward our left flank!” Tavel this time swore barely restraining his frustration.
“They press us from every side,” he muttered, his brow furrowed with frustration.
Then, barking orders, he pointed at the messenger.
“Change of order use the archers to stop them at any cost.” As he said so he then turned to the first men ”Tell whowever is in charge to hold the line.
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Reinforcements are on the way.
Now go!” The messengers raced off, while Tavel’s eyes narrowed on the shifting tides of battle.
With a sinking feeling, he knew their situation was becoming ever more dire, and if reinforcement did not come soon, then one of the lines would certainly route.
————— Alpheo stood tall in his stirrups, scanning the chaos around him.
His face remained calm, though his heart beat faster with each report coming in from the lines, as the world seemed to shake .
The left flank was buckling under pressure, messengers reporting that they were being steadily pushed back.
Meanwhile, the center wavered, barely holding as wave after wave of Herculean soldiers hammered against them, desperate calls for reinforcements echoing across the bloodied field.
A young, mud-splattered messenger pulled up beside him, panting as he just finished delivering his report.
Alpheo’s jaw clenched slightly, but he allowed himself no more than that.
In a steady, resolute voice, he replied, “Tell them to hold.
Stand the line and press forward.
Reinforcements or not, they are to hold.” The messenger hesitated, as if considering the hopelessness of delivering such orders, but one look at Alpheo’s unwavering eyes sent him scrambling back into the chaos.
Alpheo watched him go, his expression stoic.
The line had to hold, no matter the cost.
Despite the steady advance of his own contingent, Alpheo’s face darkened as he surveyed the rest of the field.
His fourth infantry corps, which had nearly broken through the Herculean flank, was now stalling as fresh reinforcements from the enemy prince flooded in, bolstering the ranks that should have crumbled by now.
Damn bastards,Alpheo thought as he fought back the urge to swallow.
His archers, had been forced to draw their secondary weapons and join the right flank, in a last bid to force the enemy to rout.
Alpheo’s confidence wavered as he felt the weight of his own mistakes.
What have I done?
he thought, fighting back the gnawing dread in his chest.
He’d ignored his wife’s concerns and dismissed her grandfather’s seasoned caution, setting off on this campaign too soon, too bold, too reckless.
Now, his forces were stretched thin, every soldier fully engaged, with no reserves left to counter the shifting tide.
Ordering a retreat now, with the enemy pressing so close, would shatter his army and nullify the only thing that kept all those nobles houses from rising up against him, from killing him, stealing his soap and cinder-making secrets and force his wife from marrying another.
He shuddered at the thought, and for a small moment he felt as he was at the bottom of an ocean.
And yet…waiting was the only option he had left.
He clenched his fists, silently willing his troops to hold on.
The only chance for victory was to withstand just a bit longer-through sheer grit, if nothing else-until some opening emerged.
His heart, usually tempered steel, now beat heavy with doubt, shadows creeping into the corners of his mind.
The storm he had belittled now thundered at the edge of his control, threatening to drown him This was too soon, they had said, and now he felt the truth of it, bitter as winter’s first frost when he trembled lacking any warmth and fire when he was still a simple slave.
He had gambled everything-his soldiers, his pride, -and yet here he was, his forces tangled holding the the fragile line that would decide between his victory and his defeat.
Suddendly from the corner of his eye, Alpheo caught a flicker of movement, something beyond the frantic blur of battle and the haze of dust.
He turned, squinting as he focused his gaze on the distant horizon.
Shapes, dark and low against the dimming sky, -horses. Riders were joining the battle.
The small lords around him crowded closer, the various sworn lords of the great houses that pledged their forces who now whispered anxiously, their voices a stream of rising panic that grated against his composure.
Cowards “We should withdraw,” muttered one, his face pale and damp with sweat.
“Your Grace, if we wait we’ll be crushed!” urged another, tugging anxiously at Alpheo’s sleeve.
He fought the urge to knock the man’s hand aside, to silence their cowardly chatter that chipped away at the thin shell of calm he clung to.
He fought against his desire to take up his swords and start slicing the man’s stomach to see if he held any gut in him .
The temptation to lash out surged within him as more voices pressed around him, each one eroding the foundation of his control.
But he quelled it, his jaw clenched tightly as he scanned the approaching riders.
”SILENCE” he shouted with the heaviest voice he could muster.
His heart hammered against his ribs, but he forced himself to stay rooted, his mind racing through the possibilities.
While those around him feared an enemy host, he knew better than to surrender to doubt.
Alpheo’s gaze narrowed as he steadied himself, refusing to waver.
He knew that man-the one he had entrusted with this task, the one who had fought beside him and had never failed him, through victories and defeats, through the darkest nights.
He believed with all his heart that Egil would not falter now.
Holding his ground, Alpheo silenced the murmurs with a fierce look, his eyes as he forced himself to believe something that by all means should have been improb-no impossible.
“Hold,” he commanded in a tone that brooked no argument , the edge of a man who believed could take on a lion if he believed hard enough “We wait.”
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